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From Summer Sun Page 3 d took, °ut the cei>ts The mum urrican To fffgßÄy 39th Year, No. 29 University of Miami, Coral Gables, Florida, July 17, 1964 Telephone MO 1-2511, Ext. 2581 ves» said I étions,” I émJ *!% of I V' »Us you see,* copies.” Q??; One lQble U '•PetsOK J 667-2666 M I S Black on chest. with MSI \ale Sec- ‘Day Is Done’ As Taps Sound Evening Division - Across the Student Lake, and through the halls of the UM Law School, the sound of “Taps” can be heard each evening at 10 p.m. The soft, strains of the bugler’s call originate at Eaton Hallt the home of UM’s Summer Band Camp, where Vickie Anderson and Van Cat ter ton signal the close of the day. $2 Million Mark Topped By UM’s June Grants University of Miami scientists received more than $2.1 million in grants and contracts in June, according to Dr. E. H. Man, UM coordinator of research. The total included approximately $1.4 million for research and about $780,000 to be used for training of UM students. UM Summer Registration Runs To4800 By PAUL SCHRETBER Hurricane News Editor UM registration figures for the first summer session fell short of last year’s record enrollment, according to Dr. M. Robert Allen, Dean of the Division of Continuing Education. Approximately 4,800 students registered for the first summer session this year, compared to 5,000 in 1963. “We are very pleased with the figures this year,” Allen said. “We had expected a larger decrease in enrollments.” The drop in enrollment is spread throughout UM’s various schools and no major decreases in enrollment were reported. “This is indicative of the increasing interest and demand for education among people with occupations, who are not full time students,” Allen said. “The more education you have, the more you realize you need.” “The University of Miami offers the student a full range of subjects and services which many schools do not have. UM compares very favorably with the largest universities in the country,” he added. By CONNIE COYNE Harriets# Reporter There used to be a universal difference between night and day — but according to Dr. M. Robert Allen, Dean of the Division of Continuing Education, evening courses at the University of Miami are the same as day courses. Courses offered through the evening division are taught by the same staff as the day division and from the same course plans, Allen explained. ♦—-------------------------------- M. Robert AUen . Evening Division Dean “The University of Miami is unique among American colleges as the evening division parallels the day division, rather than offering a vocationally-planned course structure,” he added. The plan for the Division of Additions and deletions of course offerings for the second summer session registration which are printed below are available in more complete form in the office of Continual Education, Merrick Building. Information on room and instructor changes also may be obtained at the Merrick office. Additions: MTH 103C 3 cr. — Finite Mathematics 11-12:20 M-S MTH 311A 3 cr. — Ord. Diff. Equations 8-9:20 M-S NUR 402E2 2 cr.—Legal and Ethical Asp. 8:35-9:50 p.m. M-Th PSY 509B 3 cr. — Perception 9:30-10:50 M-S PSY 630A 3 cr. — Theory of Psy. Measurement 8-9:20 M-S SPANISH 301E2 3 cr. Deletions: HUM 102B3 IEN 340B MKT 633 PHY 107B PHY 220A Among the largest June awards were: A $198,000 U.S. Army contract to Dr. Leo Rane of the department of medicine to continue studies into the treatment of malaria by chemical means; National Science Foundation funds to purchase $138,700 in equipment for the research vessel R/V Pillsbury of the Institute of Marine Science; Another NSF grant for $124,400, to be distributed for research and educational purposes by the University Research Council; and, A $100,000 National Aeronautics and Space Administration grant to Dr. Sidney Fox for investiga- Registration Set July 27 Registration for the second summer session, 1964, will be held on Monday, July 27. Undergraduate students who plan to attend the second summer semester classes may pick up their appointment cards today, Friday, July 17, at the Registrar’s office in Ashe Building. Appointment cards are available on a first come basis through July 17. Late registration will be held from 8:30 ajn. to 5 p.m. on Tuesday, July 28, and from 8:30 to 11:30 ajn. on Wednesday, July 29, at Window 1, of the Registrar’s office. tions in space-related biology. Dr. Fox is director of the Institute of Molecular Evolution in UM’s new School of Environmental and Planetary Sciences. Other agencies granting research and training awards included the Atomic Energy Commission, the National Institutes of Health, the U.S. Office of Education, the Fish and Wildlife Service, and the U.S. Navy. Miller Named CPC Head Louis A. Miller, director of the University of Miami’s Placement Service, has been elected president of the College Placement Council, whose members represent more than 3,000 colleges, universities and employers in the United States and Canada. The Council consists of officers and representatives of eight regional college placement associations. It develops literature in the placement field, coordinates studies and research projects and serves as a clearing house for exchange of information between the regional organizations. Miller has held every office in the Southern College Placement Association, serving as its president in 1960. Cohen Concludes Terms In Five Organizations Eugene E. Cohen, vice president and treasurer of the University of Miami, recently concluded terms of office in five professional and humanitarian organizations. Cohen has held the presidency of the 259-institution Southern Association of College and University Business Officers; a three-year directorship of the National Federation of College and University Business Officers; and the presidency of the Florida chapter of Financial Executives’ Institute, which is composed of the 25 largest industries in Florida. He recently completed a three year term directorship of Miami’s Goodwill Industries; and a four-year term as a member of the Program-Project Committee of the Heart Institute of the National Institutes of Health. As a member of the NIH committee, Cohen was largely responsible for inaugurating and stabilizing the financial plan by which funds are provided for long-range heart investigation projects and multi-disciplinary research units on the nation’s university campuses. Two Named To Law School A former associate justice of the Cuban Supreme Court and a U.S. State Department legal adviser will join the faculty of the University of Miami Law School in September. M. Two IMS Creatures Survive 11 Weeks In UM Laboratory Two small underseas creatures which normally die in deepths shallower than 300 feet are still alive after more than 11 weeks in a special laboratory at the University of Miami’s Institute of Marine Science. The unexpected survival of the pair, a type of sea urchin, is the longest on record at the Institute, according to Dr. Hilary B. Moore, professor of marine biology. The quarter-sized spiny animals were netted the week of April 28 by the Institute's research vessel Gerda on the western edge of the Florida Straits off Miami. They are found at depths of 50 to 1,000 fathoms (300 to 6,002 feet). Normally such specimens are preserved immediately,” Dr. Moore explained. Circulating seawater piped into Moore’s lab in the newly-opened Controlled Environments Building helps the urchins feel “at home” in their glass tank. The University Research Council recently granted a portion of a National Science Foundation institutional grant to Dr. Moore. With the funds he will construct a device to maintain the seawater at a constant temperature of 10 to 20 degrees centigrade, such as exists 50 fathoms down. The device will be used to try to extend the life of the urchins through the summer months and to aid the survival of future specimens. “Just watching them walking around and feeding is enough for the present We usually see these creatures preserved in laboratory jars” Moore explained.” Surprisingly, the urchins do not react adversely to the strong light in the laboratory and Dr. Moore has made no effort to dim the amount entering their tank.Only about one per cent of normal sunlight would reach their natural environment, hundreds of feet down. “Survival of deep sea specimens is a continuing problem,” Dr. Moore commented. “We can obviously learn much more about the behavior of many species by observing them alive.” The extended survival of the deep-sea urchins may be a first step toward developing techniques for similar successes with other invertebrates, according to Dr. Moore. Minnette Massey, acting dean of the Law School, said the two new men—Eduardo Le-Rive-rend and Walter E. Barnett—will teach courses in international law. An educator and author as well as a lawyer, Le-Riverend was a professor of law at the University of Havana from 1938 to 1959. He was an associate Supreme Court justice in Cuba from 1959-1960 and drafted Cuba’s social security law for lawyers. Barnett received his Bachelor of Arts degree summa cum laude from Yale in 1954 and his law degree from the University of Texas in 1957. He was awarded a Fulbright Fellowship by the United States government in 1957 for study at the College of Europe in Bruges, Belgium. Since 1960, Barnett has been assigned to the Office of Legal | Advisor in the State Department in Washington where he j dealt with matters related to the Bureau of Education and | Cultural Affairs and the Bureau of Public Affairs. Le-Riverend will poin the Law School faculty as adjunct professor of law; Barnett as assistant professor of law. Continuing Education was derived from the University policy of offering evening students the same quality of credit courses and instructional facilities as are offered to the day students. In addition to the regular slate of credit courses offered through the continuing studies division, other non-credit courses and seminars are offered for adults wishing to gain knowledge for personal rather than degree purposes. Among these courses are many of special interest to women in business and young homemakers. They include beginning and professional courses in interior decoration instruction in musical-comedy, business fundamentals and beginning courses in most modem languages. A series of discussion groups for members of the community, a branch of the division started two years ago, has been expanded and will cover major topics in local, national and international culture and politics in the fall. “These discussion groups are especially effective in helping men and women in business express themselves more clearly,” Allen explained. Some of the topics to be included in the fall discussion groups are world politics, economics and politics, modem painting and modem poetry. The most popular of the group sessions was one designed for parents dealing with parenthood in a free nation. This fall it will be split into three groups with sections concerning the early years, the childhood years and the adolescent period. Allen concluded, “The future will bring more and more emphasis on the continuing education of professional persons and an atmosphere for sounding opinions on contemporary world, national and local community problems. Therefore, the evening divisions will expand in this direction and away from the post-war trend of vocational evening courses.” 9Cane Eye Deadline for all copy, news stories and advertising contracts for the 1964 “mailaway” edition of The Miami Hurricane is Wednesday, July 29. The mailaway will be sent to all of UM’s incoming freshmen and returning upperclassmen. All material should be sent to The Miami Hurricane, University of Miami, Box 8107, Coral Gables, Florida. For further information call extension 2581. The St. Thomas Aquinas Center Newman Club of the University of Miami will sponsor a Bermuda Party on Thursday evening, July 23. The party will be held at the Aquinas Center, across from the UM intramural field, and will begin at 8 p.m.
Object Description
Title | Miami Hurricane, July 17, 1964 |
Subject |
University of Miami -- Students -- Newspapers College student newspapers and periodicals -- Florida |
Genre | Newspapers |
Publisher | University of Miami |
Date | 1964-07-17 |
Coverage Temporal | 1960-1969 |
Coverage Spatial | Coral Gables (Fla.) |
Physical Description | 1 volume (4 pages) |
Language | eng |
Repository | University of Miami. Library. University Archives |
Collection Title | The Miami Hurricane |
Collection No. | ASU0053 |
Rights | This material is protected by copyright. Copyright is held by the University of Miami. For additional information, please visit: http://merrick.library.miami.edu/digitalprojects/copyright.html |
Standardized Rights Statement | http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ |
Object ID | mhc_19640717 |
Full Text | Text |
Type | image/tiff |
Description
Title | Page 1 |
Object ID | mhc_19640717 |
Digital ID | mhc_19640717_001 |
Full Text | From Summer Sun Page 3 d took, °ut the cei>ts The mum urrican To fffgßÄy 39th Year, No. 29 University of Miami, Coral Gables, Florida, July 17, 1964 Telephone MO 1-2511, Ext. 2581 ves» said I étions,” I émJ *!% of I V' »Us you see,* copies.” Q??; One lQble U '•PetsOK J 667-2666 M I S Black on chest. with MSI \ale Sec- ‘Day Is Done’ As Taps Sound Evening Division - Across the Student Lake, and through the halls of the UM Law School, the sound of “Taps” can be heard each evening at 10 p.m. The soft, strains of the bugler’s call originate at Eaton Hallt the home of UM’s Summer Band Camp, where Vickie Anderson and Van Cat ter ton signal the close of the day. $2 Million Mark Topped By UM’s June Grants University of Miami scientists received more than $2.1 million in grants and contracts in June, according to Dr. E. H. Man, UM coordinator of research. The total included approximately $1.4 million for research and about $780,000 to be used for training of UM students. UM Summer Registration Runs To4800 By PAUL SCHRETBER Hurricane News Editor UM registration figures for the first summer session fell short of last year’s record enrollment, according to Dr. M. Robert Allen, Dean of the Division of Continuing Education. Approximately 4,800 students registered for the first summer session this year, compared to 5,000 in 1963. “We are very pleased with the figures this year,” Allen said. “We had expected a larger decrease in enrollments.” The drop in enrollment is spread throughout UM’s various schools and no major decreases in enrollment were reported. “This is indicative of the increasing interest and demand for education among people with occupations, who are not full time students,” Allen said. “The more education you have, the more you realize you need.” “The University of Miami offers the student a full range of subjects and services which many schools do not have. UM compares very favorably with the largest universities in the country,” he added. By CONNIE COYNE Harriets# Reporter There used to be a universal difference between night and day — but according to Dr. M. Robert Allen, Dean of the Division of Continuing Education, evening courses at the University of Miami are the same as day courses. Courses offered through the evening division are taught by the same staff as the day division and from the same course plans, Allen explained. ♦—-------------------------------- M. Robert AUen . Evening Division Dean “The University of Miami is unique among American colleges as the evening division parallels the day division, rather than offering a vocationally-planned course structure,” he added. The plan for the Division of Additions and deletions of course offerings for the second summer session registration which are printed below are available in more complete form in the office of Continual Education, Merrick Building. Information on room and instructor changes also may be obtained at the Merrick office. Additions: MTH 103C 3 cr. — Finite Mathematics 11-12:20 M-S MTH 311A 3 cr. — Ord. Diff. Equations 8-9:20 M-S NUR 402E2 2 cr.—Legal and Ethical Asp. 8:35-9:50 p.m. M-Th PSY 509B 3 cr. — Perception 9:30-10:50 M-S PSY 630A 3 cr. — Theory of Psy. Measurement 8-9:20 M-S SPANISH 301E2 3 cr. Deletions: HUM 102B3 IEN 340B MKT 633 PHY 107B PHY 220A Among the largest June awards were: A $198,000 U.S. Army contract to Dr. Leo Rane of the department of medicine to continue studies into the treatment of malaria by chemical means; National Science Foundation funds to purchase $138,700 in equipment for the research vessel R/V Pillsbury of the Institute of Marine Science; Another NSF grant for $124,400, to be distributed for research and educational purposes by the University Research Council; and, A $100,000 National Aeronautics and Space Administration grant to Dr. Sidney Fox for investiga- Registration Set July 27 Registration for the second summer session, 1964, will be held on Monday, July 27. Undergraduate students who plan to attend the second summer semester classes may pick up their appointment cards today, Friday, July 17, at the Registrar’s office in Ashe Building. Appointment cards are available on a first come basis through July 17. Late registration will be held from 8:30 ajn. to 5 p.m. on Tuesday, July 28, and from 8:30 to 11:30 ajn. on Wednesday, July 29, at Window 1, of the Registrar’s office. tions in space-related biology. Dr. Fox is director of the Institute of Molecular Evolution in UM’s new School of Environmental and Planetary Sciences. Other agencies granting research and training awards included the Atomic Energy Commission, the National Institutes of Health, the U.S. Office of Education, the Fish and Wildlife Service, and the U.S. Navy. Miller Named CPC Head Louis A. Miller, director of the University of Miami’s Placement Service, has been elected president of the College Placement Council, whose members represent more than 3,000 colleges, universities and employers in the United States and Canada. The Council consists of officers and representatives of eight regional college placement associations. It develops literature in the placement field, coordinates studies and research projects and serves as a clearing house for exchange of information between the regional organizations. Miller has held every office in the Southern College Placement Association, serving as its president in 1960. Cohen Concludes Terms In Five Organizations Eugene E. Cohen, vice president and treasurer of the University of Miami, recently concluded terms of office in five professional and humanitarian organizations. Cohen has held the presidency of the 259-institution Southern Association of College and University Business Officers; a three-year directorship of the National Federation of College and University Business Officers; and the presidency of the Florida chapter of Financial Executives’ Institute, which is composed of the 25 largest industries in Florida. He recently completed a three year term directorship of Miami’s Goodwill Industries; and a four-year term as a member of the Program-Project Committee of the Heart Institute of the National Institutes of Health. As a member of the NIH committee, Cohen was largely responsible for inaugurating and stabilizing the financial plan by which funds are provided for long-range heart investigation projects and multi-disciplinary research units on the nation’s university campuses. Two Named To Law School A former associate justice of the Cuban Supreme Court and a U.S. State Department legal adviser will join the faculty of the University of Miami Law School in September. M. Two IMS Creatures Survive 11 Weeks In UM Laboratory Two small underseas creatures which normally die in deepths shallower than 300 feet are still alive after more than 11 weeks in a special laboratory at the University of Miami’s Institute of Marine Science. The unexpected survival of the pair, a type of sea urchin, is the longest on record at the Institute, according to Dr. Hilary B. Moore, professor of marine biology. The quarter-sized spiny animals were netted the week of April 28 by the Institute's research vessel Gerda on the western edge of the Florida Straits off Miami. They are found at depths of 50 to 1,000 fathoms (300 to 6,002 feet). Normally such specimens are preserved immediately,” Dr. Moore explained. Circulating seawater piped into Moore’s lab in the newly-opened Controlled Environments Building helps the urchins feel “at home” in their glass tank. The University Research Council recently granted a portion of a National Science Foundation institutional grant to Dr. Moore. With the funds he will construct a device to maintain the seawater at a constant temperature of 10 to 20 degrees centigrade, such as exists 50 fathoms down. The device will be used to try to extend the life of the urchins through the summer months and to aid the survival of future specimens. “Just watching them walking around and feeding is enough for the present We usually see these creatures preserved in laboratory jars” Moore explained.” Surprisingly, the urchins do not react adversely to the strong light in the laboratory and Dr. Moore has made no effort to dim the amount entering their tank.Only about one per cent of normal sunlight would reach their natural environment, hundreds of feet down. “Survival of deep sea specimens is a continuing problem,” Dr. Moore commented. “We can obviously learn much more about the behavior of many species by observing them alive.” The extended survival of the deep-sea urchins may be a first step toward developing techniques for similar successes with other invertebrates, according to Dr. Moore. Minnette Massey, acting dean of the Law School, said the two new men—Eduardo Le-Rive-rend and Walter E. Barnett—will teach courses in international law. An educator and author as well as a lawyer, Le-Riverend was a professor of law at the University of Havana from 1938 to 1959. He was an associate Supreme Court justice in Cuba from 1959-1960 and drafted Cuba’s social security law for lawyers. Barnett received his Bachelor of Arts degree summa cum laude from Yale in 1954 and his law degree from the University of Texas in 1957. He was awarded a Fulbright Fellowship by the United States government in 1957 for study at the College of Europe in Bruges, Belgium. Since 1960, Barnett has been assigned to the Office of Legal | Advisor in the State Department in Washington where he j dealt with matters related to the Bureau of Education and | Cultural Affairs and the Bureau of Public Affairs. Le-Riverend will poin the Law School faculty as adjunct professor of law; Barnett as assistant professor of law. Continuing Education was derived from the University policy of offering evening students the same quality of credit courses and instructional facilities as are offered to the day students. In addition to the regular slate of credit courses offered through the continuing studies division, other non-credit courses and seminars are offered for adults wishing to gain knowledge for personal rather than degree purposes. Among these courses are many of special interest to women in business and young homemakers. They include beginning and professional courses in interior decoration instruction in musical-comedy, business fundamentals and beginning courses in most modem languages. A series of discussion groups for members of the community, a branch of the division started two years ago, has been expanded and will cover major topics in local, national and international culture and politics in the fall. “These discussion groups are especially effective in helping men and women in business express themselves more clearly,” Allen explained. Some of the topics to be included in the fall discussion groups are world politics, economics and politics, modem painting and modem poetry. The most popular of the group sessions was one designed for parents dealing with parenthood in a free nation. This fall it will be split into three groups with sections concerning the early years, the childhood years and the adolescent period. Allen concluded, “The future will bring more and more emphasis on the continuing education of professional persons and an atmosphere for sounding opinions on contemporary world, national and local community problems. Therefore, the evening divisions will expand in this direction and away from the post-war trend of vocational evening courses.” 9Cane Eye Deadline for all copy, news stories and advertising contracts for the 1964 “mailaway” edition of The Miami Hurricane is Wednesday, July 29. The mailaway will be sent to all of UM’s incoming freshmen and returning upperclassmen. All material should be sent to The Miami Hurricane, University of Miami, Box 8107, Coral Gables, Florida. For further information call extension 2581. The St. Thomas Aquinas Center Newman Club of the University of Miami will sponsor a Bermuda Party on Thursday evening, July 23. The party will be held at the Aquinas Center, across from the UM intramural field, and will begin at 8 p.m. |
Archive | mhc_19640717_001.tif |
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